Three-year changes in drinking patterns in Spain: a prospective population-based cohort study
Title
Three-year changes in drinking patterns in Spain: a prospective population-based cohort study
Publication type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2014
Authors
Journal
Drug and alcohol dependence
Volume
140
Pagination
123 - 129
Date published
2014
ISBN
18790046 (ISSN)
Keywords
Adolescent, Adult, alcohol, Alcohol Drinking, Alcoholism, cohort analysis, Cohort Studies, drinking behavior, Drinking patterns, Female, human, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, longitudinal study, male, Middle Aged, prospective cohort study, Prospective Studies, prospective study, Psychology, quality of life, Socioeconomic Factors, socioeconomics, Spain, Young Adult
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This study examined changes in alcohol drinking patterns (DP) and associated variables in a Mediterranean country.METHODS: Changes in DP between baseline (2008-2010) and follow-up (2012-2013) were examined on a Spanish population-based cohort of 2254 adults (18-59 years) using multinomial logistic regression. Heavy consumption was defined as ≥40 g/day of alcohol in men (≥24 g/day in women) and binge drinking (BD) as the intake of ≥80 g of alcohol in men (≥60 g in women) on one occasion in the previous month. Six patterns were defined: (1) non-drinkers; (2) ex-drinkers; (3) moderate drinkers without BD (MNB); (4) moderate drinkers with BD (MB); (5) heavy drinkers without BD (HNB); and (6) heavy drinkers with BD (HB).
RESULTS: Overall, 45.2% of participants changed DP during follow-up. Over 24% of non-drinkers and 19.4% of ex-drinkers at baseline qualified as MNB at follow-up. The largest flow was from HNB to MNB (57.1%). Light-drinking patterns experienced the largest gains (ex-drinkers: 37.5% and MNB: 66.7%) by absorbing individuals lost by heavy-drinking patterns (MB: 50.8% and HNB: 48.4%). Men, younger individuals, and current smokers were more likely to report heavy-drinking patterns at one or both assessments. Being married or employed increased the likelihood of reporting light-drinking patterns at both surveys (p<0.05). Improving physical quality of life and exercise were associated with a shift from light- to heavy-drinking pattern during follow-up (p<0.05).
CONCLUSIONS: DP in Spain changed over 3 years with a tendency to "regress" toward moderate patterns. Repeated measures of alcohol intake may reduce classification errors and biased results when examining the impact of alcohol on health. Copyright